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please note: if you click on an illustration you can read through the timeline with arrows
1650 B.C.
From around 1650 B.C. date fresco’s in the Minoan palaces of Knossos on the island of Crete and Akrotiri on Santorini. We see a women harvesting Saffron.
Other frescoes show clumps of saffron plants planted in rows - an early example of cultivation of this precious crop.
Source: Floralia / Martyn Rix/Kew
1495 BC
Queen Hatshepsut was one of the most powerful and successful pharaohs of ancient Egypt. She was born around 1507 BCE and reigned as the fifth pharaoh of the Eighteenth Dynasty from 1479 BCE to 1458 BCE. Hatshepsut focused on trade and building projects rather than military conquestssent
She sent planthunters from Thebes to Punt (Somalia) in search of Myrrh trees.
Source: Wikipedia
356 - 323 BC
Alexander the Great was a military genius. His most renowned achievement was the creation of one of the largest empires in the ancient world. Alexander was not only a military conqueror but also had a keen interest in various aspects of the natural world, including plants.
During his campaign in Asia, Alexander the Great is said to have collected and cataloged various plant specimens from the regions he conquered. He would take note of the local flora, and it is believed that he sent many of these specimens back to Greece. This interest in plants was not merely for botanical purposes but also for their potential economic, medicinal, and agricultural value.
Source: Floralia / Martyn Rix/Kew
15 BC-60 AD
Roman Art: Fresco from the villa of Varano a Stabies near Pompei with Flora picking flowers.
Flora was the Roman goddess of spring and flowers.
Source: Floralia/Martyn Rix/Kew
ca 23 - ca 79 AD
The Natural History is the largest single work to have survived from the Roman Empire to the modern day, the Natural History compiles information gleaned from other ancient authors. Despite the work's title, its subject area is not limited to what is today understood by natural history; Pliny himself defines his scope as "the natural world, or life".
Source: Naturalis Biodiversity Center Leiden
Between 50 and 70 AD
A Greek physician in the Roman army, Dioscorides, wrote a five-volume book known in Western Europe by its Latin title 'De Materia Medica'.
He had studied pharmacology at Tarsus in Roman Anatolia (now Turkey). The book became the principal reference work on pharmacology across Europe and the Middle East for over 1,500 years and was thus the precursor of all modern Pharma literature.
Source: Naturalis Biodiversity Center Leiden
ca 371 - ca 287 BC
Theophrastus looked at plant structure, reproduction and growth; the varieties of plants around the world; wood; wild and cultivated plants; and their uses. Book 9 of his 'Historia Plantarum' in particular, on the medicinal uses of plants, is one of the first herbals, describing juices, gums and resins extracted from plants, and how to gather them.
Source: Floralia/Martyn Rix/Kew
circa 400 AD
The first printed herbal was an illustrated edition of the Herbarium Apulei by Apuleius Platonicus (or Pseudo-Apuleius), originally compiled circa 400 AC or earlier, and issued in Rome by the printer and diplomat Johannes Philippus de Lignamine in 1481 or 1482.
The first printed edition of Herbarium Apulei contains 131 woodcuts of plants, including lists synonyms for each plant in Greek, Persian, Egyptian, and other languages, illustrating each with a stylized woodcut.
These are the earliest series of printed botanical illustrations, and probably the first formal series of illustrations on a scientific subject.
Source: the illustrated herbal/ Blunt & Raphael
CA 1425
One of the first examples of Nature print, he inked the plant and tranfered an impression to the paper
Source: The presssed plant / DiNoto&Winter
1452 - 1519
During the Renaissance, a print of a sage leaf appeared in a manuscript by Leonardo da Vinci, along with instructions for botanical printing.
Source: The presssed plant / DiNoto&Winter
1471 - 1528
Dürer was a German painter, draftsman, maker of woodcuts and copper engravings, art theorist and humanist of the Northern Renaissance. The emergence of printmaking, which paralleled the development of the printing press, made Albrecht Dürer the most popular and influential Northern European artist of this period. His workshop specialized in printing techniques. The copper engraving in particular makes a large print run possible.
Source: The presssed plant / DiNoto&Winter
1517 - 1585
Dodonaeus published Het Cruydeboeck in 1554. The book was a high point in the field of medicine in the 16th century. The plants are illustrated by the Mechelen draftsman Pieter Van der Borcht (715 images). According to Dodoens, it was necessary for pharmacists and doctors to rediscover the usefulness of many plants.
Source: The presssed plant / DiNoto&Winter
..
One of the first herbal books was made in Florence around 1520 by the 'Aromatarius' (perfumer) Zenobio Pacino. He used a sophisticated technique for the 203 plant prints in his book. The plant was first inked on both sides. It was then placed between the halves of a piece of paper folded in half and then printed using a roller. Details of the root and other plant parts that could not be printed accurately enough were added by hand. In many cases the print was coloured.
Source: The presssed plant / DiNoto&Winter
1501- 1566
Fuchs is considered one of the founders of botany, he was professor of medicine at the University of Tübingen from 1535
He started an educational botanical garden at his house, one of the first in Europe.
Fuchs wrote several books, including his first book on medicinal herbs in 1542, De Historia Stirpium.
Already in the following year, a Dutch-language edition, the Nieuwe Herbarius, was also published.
Source: Floralia/Martyn Rix/Kew
1501 – 1568
d'Orta was a Portuguese physician, herbalist, and naturalist, who worked primarily in Goa and Bombay in Portuguese India.
A pioneer of tropical medicine, pharmacognosy, and ethnobotany, Garcia used an experimental approach to the identification and the use of herbal medicines.
His most famous work is Colóquios dos simples e drogas da India, a book on herbs and drugs. Published in 1563, it is the earliest treatise on the medicinal and economic plants of India. Carolus Clusius translated it into Latin, which was widely used as a standard reference text on medicinal plants.
Source: Floralia/Martyn Rix/Kew
1530
The first herbal book with new, naturalistic illustrations in woodcut was the Herbarium Vivae Eicones (Living plant images), published by Otto Brunfels in 1530 .
The illustrations were groundbreaking, which showed the plants including flowers and roots, and even had hairs in the right places.
They were made by Hans Weiditz and printed with woodcut.
Source: Floralia/Martyn Rix/Kew
ca 1520 – 1591
De Busbecq acquired fame as an envoy of Emperor Ferdinand I to the Turkish court of Sultan Süleyman the Magnificent.
As an author he provided his readers with information about the Ottoman Empire. As a scientist, Busbecq described the vegetation of Asia, including the predilection of the Turks for tulips and other bulbous plants.
Just before his death, Busbecq sent tulip bulbs to Carolus Clusius which is the start of the tulip trade in Holland. He also introduced other plants and flowers from Turkey to the Low Countries, such as the hyacinth, the lilac, the white horse chestnut and the lily.
Source: Floralia/Martyn Rix/Kew
1526 - 1609
Carolus Clusius was director of the hortus botanics in Leiden from 1593 to 1609. Clusius received a few tulip bulbs from Ogier Ghilsen de Busbecq. He took the bulbs to Leiden, where he did a lot of research into tulip flowers. Through his research he laid the foundation for Dutch bulb growing and tulip breeding.
Next to the tulip, he introduced the ranunculus, anemone, iris and the daffodil to the Netherlands from the Mediterranean region. He also introduced the potato, the horse chestnut (1576), the string bean, the salsify and the jasmine. In addition to plants, Clusius also described mushrooms and fungi.
Source: Naturalis Leiden Netherlands
1545 - 1612
For freedom from their Protestant faith, a group of English fled to the Netherlands in 1609, to Leiden. In 1620 they traveled further, to America, the 'New World', on the ship the Mayflower.
In England the book 'The Herball' by John Gerard (1597) was with thousands of images and discussions of plants. Gerard borrowed the woodblocks for the images from the famous Plantijn printing house in Antwerp. The Herbal was largely a translation of Rembert Dodoens' Cruydeboeck (1554), which has been often translated and reprinted. A copy of the Cruydeboeck went on the Mayflower to America. The Herbal and the Cruydeboeck also describe plants from the 'New World': sunflower, tobacco, pumpkin, corn, tomato and potato.
Source: Floralia/Martyn Rix/Kew
1561 - 1629
Besler encouraged Prince Bishop Johann Konrad von Gemmingen to make a book of his special botanical garden in Eichstätt.
'Hortus Eystettensis' became one of the most beautiful florilegia from the 17th century with 367 engravings with more than 1000 drawings. The plants were drawn by a team of illustrators of which Besler was part. It is an exceptional description of the plants grown in Northern Germany at that time.
The originals are kept in the Erlangen University Library.
Source: Floralia/Martyn Rix/Kew
1526 - 1609
Thanks to van de Passe's engraving talent, the Hortus Floridus - with many drawings of tulips and other bulbous plants - occupies an important place in botanical iconography. Compared to the common woodcut process during much of the 16th century, copper intaglio printing offered the opportunity to depict plants and flowers not only accurately, but also in an artistic, pictorial way. Van de Passe seized that opportunity with both hands and produced a high-quality publication, together with his father and brothers. The Hortus Floridus has served as a source of inspiration for garden lovers for no less than three centuries.
Collection: Utrecht University Library
ca 1524–1603
Cesalpino was one of the first botanists to create a herbarium according to a scientific classification.
Cesalpino is of lasting importance mainly because of his contributions to botany. In his De plantis Libri XVI (1583), he was the first to classify plants according to their fruits and seeds. His publication can therefore be regarded as the first textbook in botany and is considered a milestone in botanical science before Carl Linnaeus.
From the beginning of the 17th century until the present time, botanists agree that in this book, in which he was guided by Aristotle, Cesalpino laid the foundations for the morphology and physiology of plants and that he was the first scientific classification of flowering plants.
Source: Floralia/Martyn Rix/Kew
1535-1596
Rauwolf traveled to the Levant and Mesopotamia in 1573-1575, today known as Syria, Lebanon, Palestine and Egypt. He collected medicinal plants which he preserved in a herbarium.
Source: Naturalis Biodiversity Center Leiden
1558
Here for you a smiling garden of everlasting flowers’ is the inscription in Latin of a 16th century Italian herbarium, the so called 'En Tibi Herbarium'- one of the oldest surviving collections of dried plants.
It contains, among other things, the oldest dried tomato and Spanish pepper in the world. Current DNA technology makes it possible to find out the genetic properties. And that is very relevant for our current time, because perhaps they were more resistant to diseases and pests.
Source: Naturalis Biodiversity Center Leiden
1566
The only preserved herbarium from the sixteenth century that was made in the Low Countries is the Cadé Apothekers Herbarium compiled by Petrus Cadé from Brabant. It stands out because of its shape: no large sheets, but a handy book in a parchment binding with a lock, made to take with you.
The first collectors of plants were often doctors and pharmacists, who brought medicinal plants to serve as examples for students. Therefore it is quite possible that Petrus Cadé was a pharmacist.
Source: Naturalis Biodiversity Center Leiden
1563 - 1611
Van Linschoten stood at the cradle of Dutch shipping to Asia. As a bookkeeper for the Portuguese, he had access to secret nautical charts of the Carreira da Índia, which he secretly copied.
He published this information in the 'Reys-Gheschrift' (1595) with information about the inhabitants and crops of the Canary, Cape Verde Islands and Goa. In his 'Itinerario' (1596) he shared botanical and ethnic information as wel as geographical information about the route to follow to Java, China and Japan. This gave the VOC an enormous advantage over other countries.
Source: Linschoten veereniging
between 1694 and 1710
The Dutch East India Company (VOC) occupied the island of Ceylon (now Sri Lanka). Several VOC officers had a keen interest in the medicinal application of the local flora. This manuscript 'Plantarum Malabaricarum' contains 262 watercolour drawings of medicinal plants from Sri Lanka, with handwritten descriptions of local names, habitus, medicinal properties and therapeutic applications. An important ethnobotanical treasure for Sri Lanka.
Source: Naturalis Biodiversity Center Leiden
1646–1695
A bound herbarium containing 51 dried specimens from Suriname considered as the oldest documented herbarium collection not only for Suriname but for the Guianas region.
The 48 species in the herbarium are almost all useful plants: cultivated crops, wild edible fruits, medicinal plants, timber trees, fish poison, colorants and roof thatch material. Most species are used similarly today, and more than half still exist. The presence of two species prove the early establishment of African food plants in the economy of Suriname.
Source: Naturalis Biodiversity Center Leiden
1647 -1717
The work of the German-Dutch Merian is known to a wide audience. Scientists are still undecided about her extensive and progressive entomological work and her adventurous journey to Suriname - at a time when women were subservient to men. She was a courageous and independent woman, the first known entomologist and the first scientific artist.
Source: KB national lybrary
1743 - 1808
Brandes stepped ashore in 1778 as a preacher on the island of Java - nowadays Indonesia. After a year he lost his wife Anna and buried his grief in drawing everyday the scenes of daily life.
No other work with such detailed drawings exist that tell the story of 18th century colonial life and biodiversity in Indonesia, as well as in Sri Lanka and South Africa where he also lived for several years with his son.
Source: The World of Jan Brandes, 1743-1808
ca 1636 - 1702
Everhardus Kickius's original drawing evidently traced from the physical specimen
Source: The presssed plant / DiNoto&Winter
1660-1753
Sloane was a Scottish physician, botanist and collector of rarities. His interest in living nature led him to study medicine in London. Sloane focused his attention mainly on botany, materia medica and pharmacy.
During his stay as a doctor in Jamaica, he built a herbarium with about 800 previously unknown plant species. The flora of the Caribbean island had never been described by scientists
Sloane bequeathed his collection to “King and Parliament” which was the start of the British Museum.
Source: Floralia/Martyn Rix/Kew
1682
The Monickx Atlas
In 1682, Joan Huydecoper (mayor of Amsterdam) and Jan Commelin (merchant) took the initiative to design a new Hortus Medicus for the city of Amsterdam. Thanks to their contacts in administration and trade, the VOC leading the way, and their practical botanical knowledge, plants, seeds, bulbs and cuttings came to the Amsterdam Hortus to be further cultivated outside their original area of ​​distribution.
Source: Allard Pierson
1768–1837
English physician and botanical writer, noted for 'A New Illustration of the Sexual System of Carolus Von Linnæus' (1797–1807) and "The British Flora" (1812)
The most ambitious part of the book was Part III, the Temple of Flora.
The first plates were engraved by Thomas Medland in May 1798, from paintings by Philip Reinagle engraved in aquatint, stipple and line engraving.
Source: Floralia/Martyn Rix/Kew
1633 - 1704
Boccone was an Italian botanist from the island of Sicily. He devoted much of his life to natural history. In addition, he made a series of journeys that took him to many places in Europe and to the centers of science at the time. He was one of the pioneers of the description of the flora of Europe
Source: The presssed plant / DiNoto&Winter
Ca 1607 - ca 1665
Eckhout is considered one of the first Europeans to record the inhabitants of the New World as a portrait and still life painter.
In 1636 he traveled to Dutch Brazil. There he painted portraits of the original population, enslaved people and a mulatto. He is also famous for his series still lifes with Brazilian fruit and vegetables and exotic animals, which appeared in the count's menagerie in
Mauritsstad.
RKD - Dutch Institute for Art History
1610 - 1644
Margraffe was a researcher of German origin who died at a young age and made important contributions to knowledge of the botany, zoology, cartography, astronomy and meteorology of Northern Brazil during Dutch colonial rule there.
He is considered one of the founders of tropical medicine. Marggrafe propagated the eating of fresh fish, vegetables, oranges and limes to prevent scurvy in sailors.
His part in the Historia Naturalis Brasiliae, the first four books, called De Medicina Brasiliensi, contains descriptions of the most important diseases, such as eye diseases and dysentery.
Source: Biodiversity Heritage library
1678-1693
An epic treatise dealing with the medicinal properties of the flora in the Indian state of Kerala. Originally written in Latin, it was compiled over a period of nearly 30 years and published in Amsterdam with a total of 794 copper plate engravings. The book was conceived by Hendrik van Rheede, the Governor of Dutch Malabar at the time. The work was edited by a team of nearly a hundred assisted by the King of Cochin and the ruling Zamorin of Calicut and prominent Indian contributors.
Source: Biodiversity Heritage Library
1641 - 1712
In Anatomy of Plants (1680) the English botanist Nehemiah Grew revealed for the first time the inner structure and function of plants in all their splendorous intricacy. Grew’s pioneering ‘mechanist’ vision paved the way for the science of plant anatomy.
Source: Public Domain Review
1627–1702
Rumphius was a German soldier, architect, geographer and merchant, who is mainly known for his work as a botanist. He stayed in Ambon for 49 years and is the author of, among other things, The Amboinsche herb book
In 1653 Rumphius arrived in Batavia with the VOC and went to the southern Moluccas. Rumphius did not like life as a soldier and he took up administrative service. From then he began to study the nature around him, starting with the popper tree, the genus Areca, and fruit trees such as the durian. He studied the language and learned from the local people about the medicinal uses of plants. In 1662 he traveled back and forth to the Banda Islands.
Source: Floralia/Martyn Rix/Kew
1682–1749
The works of the English naturalist Catesby are the first major illustrated books devoted to American plants: "The Natural History of Carolina, Florida and the Bahama Islands,”
What is remarkable about Gatesby is that he taught himself how to etch and made all 220 etching plates himself. He also often put 4 different plants together on 1 plate. And he gave the Magnolia Grandiflora a black background, which was very unusual at the time but turned out very effective.
Gatesby's second book showed the flowers cultivated in England, some of which were grown from seeds he collected in Virginia. Until his death he worked on the book with the final title: Hortus Europae Americanus.
Collection: Royal library of Windsor
1708 - 1770
Ehret lifted botanical illustration as an art form and as a branch of science to a level never before reached. He painted plants that came to England from America when they were in bloom for the first time.
Ehret learned to draw at a young age from his father, who died early. Through an uncle he worked as a gardener and fortunately had enough time to draw. His talent was discovered by Dr. Christoph Trew. Trew was well connected with leading botanists and became Ehret's patron. He encouraged him to travel and meet botanists in other countries, which led him to meet Hans Sloan in England and Carl Linaeus in the Netherlands, for whom he produced paintings of plants that are included in the Hortus Cliffortianus.
Source: Floralia/Martyn Rix/Kew
1707 - 1778
Linnaeus is considered one of the most influential figures in the history of biology. His most influential works are Systema naturae (1735) and Species plantarum, the first edition (1753) of which has been regarded as the starting point of botanical nomenclature since 1905.
During his stay in Leiden (NL) he published his Systema Naturae (1735) in which he divided nature into three kingdoms (mineral, plant and animal kingdoms).
Linnaeus' work had an enormous influence on biology and the understanding of biodiversity. His systematics formed the basis for further developments in the biological sciences and contributed to a better understanding of the relationships between different species.
Source: the Linnaen Society London
1629 -1704
“There is no nobler piece of fruit than the pineapple,” wrote the Dutch physician Jacob Bontius in 1629 after tasting the pineapple in Batavia. Soon after, the pineapple became the symbol of the new world and the Golden Age in the Netherlands. A competition arose to see who was the first to grow pineapples in Europe, which Agnes Block won. An acquaintance at the Leiden Hortus gave her a cutting of a pineapple plant imported from Suriname. After much patience and attention, a full-fledged pineapple grew in her greenhouse in 1685, which she donated to the states of Utrecht. An exceptional achievement for a woman at that time. She grew more plants that she had drawn by Maria Sibylla Merian, Alida Withoos, Otto Marseus, Maria Monickx van Schriek and Johannes Bronckhorst, among others, with which she financially supported the development of botanical art.
1791 -1868
The Wardian case was an early type of terrarium, a sealed protective container for plants. It found great use in the 19th century in protecting foreign plants imported to Europe from overseas, the great majority of which had previously died from exposure during long sea journeys, frustrating the many scientific and amateur botanists of the time. The Wardian case was the direct forerunner of the modern terrarium and vivarium and the inspiration for the glasshouse. It is named after Nathaniel Bagshaw Ward (1791–1868) of London, who promoted the case after experiments.
1740-1807
French botanist and explorer, known as the first woman to circumnavigate the world. She accompanied the French explorer Louis Antoine de Bougainville during his expedition from 1766 to 1769 aboard the ships 'La Boudeuse' and 'L'Étoile'.
Jeanne Baret was originally disguised as a man named "Jean Baret" to conceal her identity, as women were not allowed on voyages of discovery at the time. It was only during the journey itself that they discovered she was a woman. Her contribution to the expedition was significant, especially in the field of botany, where she collected many plants and samples. Jeanne Baret's journey was a remarkable achievement and has historically contributed to the understanding of the natural world.
1704-1763
He assembled a large and impressive herbarium, about which in 1733, he first published a work with the title of "Botanica in originali" and later releases known as "Botanica in Originali, seu Herbarium Vivum". Considered to be Kniphof's magnum opus. It was renowned for employing a preparation/printing technique known as "nature printing", which at the time was a little understood process that Kniphof had mastered in order to imprint details of various botanical specimens.
1760 - 1826
Flora Graeca is one of the most remarkable illustrated floras ever to see the light of day. The authors, botanist John Sibthorp and illustrator Ferdinad Bauer, were beginning to gather material for the monumental Flora Graeca during their 1787 expedition.
1760 - 1846
Hoppe was a German pharmacist, botanist, entomologist and physician. He is remembered for his contributions to the study of alpine flora. Among his writing efforts is this work on the flora of Regensburg entitled 'Ectypa plantarum ratisbonensium - or, Impressions of those plants growing wild about Regensburg'
1796 - 1866
Von Siebold was from 1823 to 1829 doctor on Deshima, a former artificial, fan-shaped islet in the port of Nagasaki in Japan. Deshima was a Dutch trading post and the only contact between the western world and the largely closed Japan from 1641 to 185
As a doctor, scientist and botanist, Von Siebold brought knowledge about Japan to the Netherlands and Western medication to Japan.
His natural history collection was the first major collection of Japanese flora and fauna.
1706 - 1790
The nature print design was developed by Benjamin Franklin for use on Pennsylvania currency in the decades before the American Revolution. Since no two leaves are alike, it was hoped that the design would aid in detecting counterfeit bills. Franklin's specific method for making these was kept a secret and is unknown, but this form of nature printing was prevalent in the American colonies and the United States from the 1730s through 1779
1813 – 1869
Auer was an Austrian printer, inventor and botanical illustrator. He was the first person who gave an explaination about 'nature printing' in his book The Discovery of the Nature Printing-Process (1853).
He detailed the use of actual plant material, rocks and lace, impressed upon lead or into gum, to demonstrate what he saw as a major advance in the productions of botanical works. His intention was to produce 'artistical-scientific objects', while greatly reducing the problems of producing herbaries and other works of natural history.
1857
1874 - 1950
Ames’s study of orchids began while he was still a very young man. A lifelong passion began with a glimpse of a Dendrobium nobile by his father's bedside. "Then & there I fell in love with orchids and began a collection of my own." But soon a private collection was not enough. Ames, determined to take every botanical course he could find, went to Harvard. During his botanical career at Harvard, Ames identified and studied orchids from Florida, the Caribbean, the Philippines, and Central & South America.
1858-1949
It was from her father that Olivia’s interest in travel and love of nature probably stemmed. In 1908, at the age of 50, Olivia embarked on the first of her two trips to India alone. In the preface to her sketchbooks a passage entitled ’Curious Fragment’ shows the determination and independence this would have required . The 16 sketch books, donated to the Natural History Museum Library in 1952 each contain around 30 pages of annotated watercolours made in Sindh, Calcutta, Darjeeling, Mussoorie, Luknow, Karsiyang, Karachi and various other places across India and Pakistan- spanning both of Olivia’s trips in 1908-1910 and 1912-1913.
1710 - 1798
In 1736 von Reck sailed with other colonists from Germany to Georgia. Welleducated and blessed with an amazing artistic gift, von Reck kept a travel diary, wrote separate descriptions of the plants, animals and Indians he discovered in Georgia and drew some fifty watercolor and pencil sketches of what he saw.
These drawings are important as science because represent the earliest records of several plants and animals.
1769 1859
From 1799 until 1804, Alexander von Humboldt and his traveling companion Aime Bonpland journeys through today’s Venezuela, Cuba, Colombia, Equador, Peru , Mexico and the United States. During this time they collected thousands of plant specimens, then dried and prepared them tone sent to Europe for further study.
1809 - 1882
Darwin derives his fame from his theory that evolution of species is driven by natural selection.
During a research trip with the ship the Beagle (1831-1836), Darwin visited South America, Australia, southern Africa and various archipelagos in the Pacific and Indian Oceans. In all these places he studied the local animals, plants, fossils and geology. Much of his later life was devoted to researching and classifying the objects collected on his journey, and it was through this research that he arrived at his theory of the origin of species.
1799 - 1871
The English botanist and photographer Anna Atkins was a modern woman in every respect. For the publication of her plant collection she used the latest technique, the then newly discovered cyanotype of John Hershel. Although the artistic was not her goal, she arranged the plants in such an elegant way that she merged rational science with modern art. She is therefore seen as the first female photographer and the first person to publish a photo book.
1800-1877
The versatile English scientist and pioneer William Henry Fox Talbot is best known as a pioneer of modern photography. He exposed fibrous paper coated with silver chloride in a camera obscura, darkening the areas hit by the light. The addition of bile acid to the exposed paper accelerated the
development of the image and revolutionized early photography.
1835 - 1869
Alexandrine was a Dutch explorer who was the first Western woman to penetrate Central Africa in 1862 and 1863 and then in 1868/69 as the first western woman to travel far into the Sahara. She was also the first important photographer in the Netherlands.
1865 - 1932
Blossfeldt taught sculpture at the Berlin School of Fine Arts, where he used the natural forms of plants, flowers and seed pods as a starting point.
Blossfeldt specialized in macro photography, resulting in an extremely modern and beautiful body of botanical art that focuses on the intrinsic beauty of the natural form.
1829 - 1860
Bradbury is known for his book The Ferns of Great Britain and Ireland with author Thomas Moore and editor John Lindley published in 1855. It used the innovative technique of nature printing invented by Alois Auer and Andreas Worring in 1852 and improved by Bradbury. The technique consisted of pressing a leafy specimen onto a thin, soft lead plate, leaving an intaglio impression with very fine detail.
1768 - 1837
In 1799 Thornton commenced his work on the New Illustration of the Sexual System of Carolus von Linnaeus a work of botanical science to be published in three parts.
The first was a dissertation on the sex of plants and the second an exposition of the sexual system. The most ambitious part was Part III, the Temple of Flora (1799-1807).
The first plates were engraved by Thomas Medland in May 1798, from paintings by Philip Reinagle. Between 1798 and 1807, they produced a total of thirty-three coloured plates, engraved in aquatint, stipple and line engraving.
1759 - 1840
Redouté, was a Belgian painter and botanist in the service of the Empress Joséphine de Beauharnais (vrouw van Napoleon), Redouté was able to indulge his talents in books with drawings of flowers from all over the world and drawings of the roses in the garden of Malmaison.
Besides being a painter Redoute was also important for science. He made more than 2,100 drawings of 1,800 different species of plants, many of which were unknown at the time.
Utrecht 1817 - Batavia 1892
lived in Suriname and New Orleans. After her husband died she went to her brother in Netherlands/Indië now Indonesia where she teached languages and made beautiful scientific drawings of Indonesian plants, fruits en trees.
From this drawings she published a book: "Fleurs, Fruits et Feuillages Choisis de l'Ile de Java" in 1863.
1830 - 1890
Marianne North travelled the world painting plants, people and places.
From mighty redwoods in California to pitcher plants in Borneo, she painted plants great and small across the globe. She made it her mission to paint as many plants in faraway places as she could.
Between 1871 and 1885 Marianne travelled extensively, almost always on her own. From Brazil, to Jamaica, to Japan and India, she visited 15 countries in 14 years and painted the people, places and plants that she saw.
1834 – 1919
Heackel was a German zoologist, naturalist, eugenicist, philosopher, physician, professor, marine biologist and artist. He discovered, described and named thousands of new species, mapped a genealogical tree relating all life forms and coined many terms in biology, including ecology, phylum, phylogeny and Protista.
The published artwork of Haeckel includes over 100 detailed, multi-colour illustrations of animals and sea creatures, collected in his Kunstformen der Natur.
Amsterdam 1743 - Cape Town 1795
Gordon served as a military officer in the Dutch East India Company. He went on more expeditions than any other 18th-century explorer of Southern Africa and visited regions that were largely unknown to Europeans.
Artist Schoemaker accompanied Gordon on all his journeys, producing a fine record of their travels and causing present-day confusion as to which sketches are his and which Gordon’s.
1917-2008
Roots are the hidden half of the plant. The Austrian scientist's entire life has been devoted to digging up roots and making them visible. Scientific draftsman Erwin Lichtenegger laid down the roots in 1002 beautiful black and white pen drawings instead of photos. As a result, we now have a consistent overview of the architecture of roots for seven atlases.
1909 - 1988
Margaret Mee was a botanical artist who produced hundreds of botanical paintings as a result of her exploration of the flora of Brazil, along the River Amazon and in the Amazon rainforest.
In 1952, age 42 she left England to go and live in the Amazon. Age 47 she started to explore the Amazon where she studied and painted the plants and flowers of the Amazon rainforest for the next 30 years. She also found and recorded new plants.
Rich Heritage
Botanical Fine Art Prints
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